With football chiefs looking to find this year's official FA Cup anthem,
Telegraph Sport looks back at some of the less celebrated tracks by those in
the game.

1. Glenn Hoddle and Chris Waddle - Diamond Lights Somehow reached the lofty heights of No 12 in the UK charts in 1987. The video of the pair on Top of the Pops clearly shows Hoddle - decked out in classic white jacket -wanting the whole experience more than this partner.

2. Paul Gascoigne - Fog on the Tyne This reached No 2 in the aftermath of the 1990 World Cup which saw 'Gazzamania' board games, biographies, video games and countless TV adverts released.

3. Kevin Keegan - Head Over Heels in Love Reached No 31 in June 1979, largely thanks to song writers Chris Norman and Pete Spencer from the band Smokie. More promisingly, pop lovers took the single to No 10 in the German charts. However, Keegan's follow-up "England" failed to chart.

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4. Vinnie Jones - Wooly Bully This single - released in 1993 during his second season with Wimbledon - should perhaps be put in the same territory as Berti Vogts' Der Lyrische Berti.

5. Anfield Rap (Liverpool, 1988) A Cup final memorable for two reasons: Wimbledon winning it and this excruciating effort. The song is a parody of a number of hip-hop tracks, but with a dressing-room full of characters at the time, it is little wonder they produced what they did. “Steve McMahon sure can rap, it's about time he had an England cap.”

6. Andy Cole's Outstanding At first it takes the slow turn of Aerosmith's Walk This Way before descending into a forgettable rap. "Who's that Andy Cole" his backing singers' muse. One in the reduced box since 1999.

... and other FA Cup anthem flops

7. Coventry City - Go For It The first track on the club's Cov Classics LP ahead of Jimmy Hill's Sky Blues. Go For It was Coventry's FA Cup single during their vintage Wembley win in 1987, reaching No 61

8. Move Move Move (Manchester United, 1996) This is bedroom/attic music mixing at its best. A youthful Scholes, Beckham and Nevilles team up with old heads for this '96 effort and rightly one of the worst anthems of recent times.

9. Hot Stuff (Arsenal, 1998) Donna Summer's classic was used for this flop. With "You’re telling us we’re boring, We’ll just keep on scoring now, Hot Stuff.." The then-Highbury Library managed to at least take the mickey. They then scored two past Newcastle to lift the Cup.

10. Let’s Dance (Middlesbrough, 1997)

These were happier times for Boro back in 1997. A host of stars were playing for the club - led by Juninho - and celebrity fan Bob Mortimer signed up to sing over Chris Rea's track. Then came Roberto di Matteo's goal...